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Scientists Report First Remote, Underwater Detection Of Harmful Algae, Toxins
Scientists at NOAA"s National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science and the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute (MBARI) have successfully conducted the first remote detection of a harmful algal species and its toxin below the ocean"s surface. The achievement was recently reported in the June issue of Oceanography.
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Breakthrough In The Development Of A Novel Human Antibody Platform Announced By OMT
Open Monoclonal Technology, Inc. (OMT), in collaboration with Sangamo BioSciences, Inc. (NASDAQ, SGMO), Sigma-Aldrich Corporation (NASDAQ: SIAL), The Medical College of Wisconsin, and INSERM, have announced the creation of the first targeted knockout rats as detailed in "Knockout Rats Produced via Embryo Microinjection of Designed Zinc Finger Nucleases," published in the July 24th issue of Science. The creation of rats with permanent, heritable genetic mutations is a critical milestone in the development of OMT"s novel human monoclonal antibody platform.
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Stem Cell Research Progress - cells that become part of the pancreas or part of the bile duct
Researchers from Cincinnati Children"s Hospital Medical Center have discovered that a specific gene - Sox17 - plays an important role in directing cells to become part of the pancreas or part of the bile duct (used in the digestion of food).
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Lanreotide Confers Multiple Benefits In Acromegaly Patients

WASHINGTON D.C. - Most patients with acromegaly who are switched to the long-acting somatostatin analogue lanreotide (SomatulineR Depot) injection from initial treatment with octreotide cite a preference for lanreotide as their future therapy, according to data released here at the 91st Annual Meeting of the Endocrine Society (ENDO 09). The results, from the multicenter Assessment of the Ability of Subjects With Acromegaly or Their Partners to Administer Somatuline Autogel (SALSA) study, also demonstrate good efficacy and tolerability with self- or partner-inject lanreotide. "The main message to clinicians is that patients with acromegaly can either inject themselves with the medication or have a family member rather than a health care professional do it for it for them, thereby avoiding monthly trips to the doctor"s office," said SALSA principal investigator Roberto Salvatori, MD, associate professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. Dr. Salvatori and co-workers tested the convenience, safety, and efficacy of self- or partner-administration of lanreotide in 59 acromegalic patients who were switched directly from lanreotide and in other patients who were treatment-naç¯ve or not currently on lanreotide. The study"s primary endpoint was the percentage of patients/partners competent to self- or partner-administer lanreotide at study completion as assessed by the health care professional. . Overall, 41 patients said they were able to correctly self-inject, and the other 18 were able to correctly partner- inject lanreotide. Self- or partner -administration of lanreotide was associated with insulin growth factor (IGF)-1 and growth hormone (GH ) control in many patients with acromegaly (73.1% of switch and 30.4% of other patients) at the end of the trial. Self- or partner-administration of lanreotide was generally well tolerated, and fewer lanreotide-treated patients described their injections as painful. Eight one percent of patients said they preferred lanreotide for future use, 13 percent favored octreotide, and six percent voiced no preference. Dr. Salvatori said that about 50 to 60% of patients with active acromegaly respond to the somatostatin analogue class of medications. The ideal patient, he added, is a patient who has either failed surgery (not cured) or for whom surgery would be risky (coexisting diseases) as well as the patient who is unlikely to be cured (tumors with extension in nonoperable areas but without compression of the vision pathways). Acromegaly results from an excessive production of growth hormone, which produces an enlargement and overgrowth of many organs, bones, and soft tissues as well as metabolic and biochemical changes. About three to four out of every million adults will develop the condition each year. The disorder is often misdiagnosed because of its wide range of symptoms and their slow onset, and it may take in some cases take up to ten years to establish a correct diagnosis. Unless treated, acromegaly can lead to severe sequelae, including the onset of type 2 diabetes, hypertension, arthritis, an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, and colon cancer. Written by Jill Stain Jill Stein is a Paris-based freelance medical writer. jillstein03(at)gmail.com Copyright: Medical News Today Not to be reproduced without permission of Medical News Today


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